Easing security token issuance rules could increase adoption and liquidity for security tokens, indirectly affecting btc and eth as they are often used as collateral or trading pairs.
Based on official statements from sec commissioner hester peirce and reported by cointelegraph, a reputable news source.
The potential for reduced regulatory burden and increased accessibility tends to create bullish sentiment for involved assets, especially security tokens. it may also improve adoption of blockchain and defi.
Regulatory changes usually take time to implement and for the market to fully respond to them. this will require more actions from the sec. the full effects of these rule changes will be realized over the long term.
Alex O’Donnell 3 minutes ago SEC considers new rules easing security token issuance The US Securities and Exchange Commission is looking at potentially exempting companies that issue tokenized securities from certain registration requirements. 25 Total views Listen to article 0:00 News COINTELEGRAPH IN YOUR SOCIAL FEED The US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is considering rule changes to let companies more freely issue tokenized securities, SEC Commissioner Hester Peirce said in a speech published on May 8. The regulator is “considering a potential exemptive order” for firms using blockchain technology to “issue, trade, and settle securities” that would release them from certain registration requirements, Peirce said in the speech. For example, decentralized exchanges (DEXs) may no longer need to register “as a broker-dealer, clearing agency, or an exchange,” Peirce said. The SEC has previously brought numerous charges against DEXs such as Uniswap for failing to register as securities exchanges. Firms should “not have to comply with inapt regulations, which, in many cases, were developed well before the technologies being tested existed and may be obviated by attributes of that technology,” Peirce said. Commissioner Peirce described the planned changes in a May 8 speech. Source: SEC Under such an exemption, companies would still be expected to comply with rules designed to prevent fraud and market manipulation, the commissioner said. They may also need to meet certain disclosure and recordkeeping requirements. Related: Nasdaq urges SEC to treat certain digital assets as 'stocks by any other name' Sharp policy pivot The SEC has dramatically pivoted its stance on cryptocurrency oversight since US President Donald Trump took office in January. Under the leadership of former SEC Chair Gary Gensler, the agency brought upward of 100 lawsuits against crypto firms for alleged securities law violations. However, under Trump nominee Paul Atkins, who was sworn in as chair on April 21 , the agency has claimed jurisdiction over a narrower segment of cryptocurrencies. In February, the SEC issued guidance stating that memecoins — if clearly identified as purely speculative assets with no intrinsic value — do not qualify as investment contracts under US law. In April, the regulator said that stablecoins — digital tokens pegged to the US dollar — similarly do not qualify as securities if they are marketed solely as a means of making payments . Magazine: Ethereum is destroying the competition in the $16.1T TradFi tokenization race # Blockchain # Altcoin # Business # Security # SEC # Adoption # Tokens # DLT # DeFi # Regulation # Tokenization # RWA Tokenization Add reaction